A bench of Chief Justice G Rohini and Justice Sangita Dhingra Sehgal issued notices to the Centre and the Ministry of Environment, Forest and Climate Change, seeking their replies within two weeks.
The court has fixed the matter for hearing on August 19.
The plea has sought a direction to the Centre to provide devices, developed by Indian Agricultural Research Institute, to farmers to keep away vermin including nilgai, elephants and wild boars, instead of killing them.
Referring to the recent culling of animals, the petition claimed over 500 nilgai and over 100 elephants were killed on the ground that they were posing threat to human and crops.
It alleged that following a 2015 notification of the Centre declaring Nilgai and wild boars as vermin in Bihar for a year, nearly 500 nilgai were killed in last six months by hunters "unscientifically".
The petitioner also appealed to the court to direct the
government to provide the device, called 'Harmony Q Series', to farmers so that they can use it to scare away animals and birds.
"The device can cover four acres and has to be installed at least one feet above the crop. It does not have any harmful effect on humans, animals and birds," it said.
The first notification issued by the Ministry, dated December 1, 2015, declared nilgai and wild boar as vermin in some districts of Bihar for one year.
Earlier, the Supreme Court had asked the animal rights activist and NGOs, who had sought quashing of these three notifications of the Centre, to approach the High Court.
The apex court had said that High Court had jurisdiction to decide the issue.
